Biden State Department Official Seemingly Deletes Twitter Account After Saying ‘I Prefer High Gas Prices’

Fuel prices at a Chevron gas station in San Francisco, California, on Thursday, June 9, 20
David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

A Biden administration State Department official who tweeted his support for “high gas prices” has seemingly deleted his Twitter account after receiving online backlash.

“I prefer high gas prices = less driving, less CO2,” state department official Alan Eyre tweeted on Friday.

Eyre said this in response to President Joe Biden’s claim “America’s drivers will spend on average $30 less per month on gas than they did during peak prices.”

The State Department official faced backlash online from Twitter users, including from one former Republican congressional candidate, Ron Bassilian, who called Eyre a “ghoul” and argued “gas demand is inelastic.”

According to the New York Post, Eyre replied to Bassilian, saying, “Perhaps, but I don’t think it is inelastic and I remember in the 1970s the oil embargo led to a massive increase in renewables,” and added #BeKind at the end.

Other Twitter users slammed Eyre, with one user accusing him of being “out of touch.”

“Another example of why the swamp needs to be drained,” another user tweeted.

Eyre has since appeared to have deleted or deactivated his Twitter account.

The State Department official’s tweet closely mirrors Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg’s recent remarks that higher gas prices mean more Americans can buy electric vehicles, despite Buttigieg admitting they are still expensive.

Last month, another Biden cabinet member, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm, said gas prices were “unsustainable,” she noted the spike in prices was “accelerating our progress toward clean energy.” She also claimed that high gas prices make a “very compelling case” to purchase an electric vehicle.

While gas prices have come down after hitting a national average of over $5.00 per gallon in June, they are still way up since Biden took office in January 2021.

The president recently faced criticism for touting that his administration had taken “historic action” to lower gas prices, but many pointed out that the national average for gas prices was $2.39 per gallon on his inauguration day, Breitbart News reported.

Currently, the national average for gas prices is at $4.36 per gallon, which is almost $2 higher than it was on inauguration day.

You can follow Ethan Letkeman on Twitter at @EthanLetkeman.

COMMENTS

Please let us know if you're having issues with commenting.